It is now up to the nine-member celebrity jury led by Spanish director Pedro Almodovar to decide which movie will triumph.
The Cannes film festival ends Sunday with a movie about a hammer-wielding hitman, a rousing story of AIDS activists and a parable of Putin's Russia among the favourites to lift its top prize, the Palme d'Or.
After 12 days
of screenings and starry celebrations of the festival's 70th
anniversary -- which were somewhat muted by the Manchester bombing -- it
is now up to the nine-member celebrity jury led by Spanish director
Pedro Almodovar to decide which movie will triumph.
Rarely
has the race looked so open, with many critics complaining there was no
standout film to get behind among the 19 in the official competition.
That shifted Saturday when the final film, Lynne Ramsay's "You Were Never Really Here", had many reaching for superlatives.
Two
critics told the Scottish director at a post-screening news conference
that her film about a traumatised hitman who saves a young girl from a
prostitution ring was a "masterpiece".
Its star Joaquin Phoenix was also being talked of as a contender for best actor.
If Ramsay were to win she would be only the second woman director ever to take home the Palme d'Or.
New
Zealander Jane Campion won for "The Piano" in 1993. But as Hollywood
star Salma Hayek pointed out Tuesday in Cannes, Campion "only got half
the Palme d'Or, not even a full one", having to share it with Chinese
director Chen Kaige for "Farewell My Concubine".
A woman winner?
With US star and
Cannes jury member Jessica Chastain sporting a Dior "We Should All Be
Feminists" T-shirt, and the lack of women directors dominating debate at
the festival, a Ramsay win would send a strong signal.
The
Glasgow-born director's main competition comes from the stirring French
drama about AIDS activists "120 Beats Per Minute" by Robin Campillo,
who co-wrote the script for the Palme d'Or-winning "The Class" in 2008.
"Loveless",
a harrowing tale of a Russian couple who want rid of their child from
"Leviathan" director Andrey Zvyagintsev, is also thought to be in the
reckoning.
Nor was the Swedish satire "The Square", which sends up the art world and political correctness, short of admirers.
Overall,
however, critics were frustrated by the main race, preferring instead
to swoon over films such as "Ava", "The Rider" and "Marlina the Murderer
in Four Acts" in the sidebar Directors' Fortnight and Critics' Week
sections.
"I don't think it has been a vintage Cannes, certainly in terms of the main competition," Xan Brooks of Britain's The Observer told AFP.
'Cautious and conservative'
"It has felt a
little cautious and conservative. It's almost as if the increased
security on the doors of the Palais (where the films are shown) has
barred some of the more raucous, rude, rowdy contenders that might have
otherwise managed to find their way through."
Jonathan
Romney, of Screen International and the Independent on Sunday, was
equally downbeat. "There were a lot of names to get excited about this
year but unfortunately we have been left disappointed.
"Good directors have not come up with their best," he added.
But
for Philippe Rouyer, of the French magazine Positif, there were plenty
of gems outside the main competition, such as young Russian Kantemir
Balagov's debut "Tesnota" (Closeness), which also caught Romney's eye.
The
Guardian's Peter Bradshaw was much more sanguine, calling "120 Beats
Per Minute" "terrific" and "Loveless" "brilliant and compelling".
"Some professed themselves marginally let down, but I have been hugely enthusiastic about quite a few films," he added.
What
was unanimous, however, was the acclaim for 79-year-old veteran Agnes
Varda, who got the festival's very best reviews for her
out-of-competition documentary with the street artist JR, "Faces
Places".
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